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These guys aren't NFL starters or franchise QBs and teams tried to force (or hope) them to work. For the past three-five years you've known almost from the first game a rookie QB plays whether or not they've got the stuff to be a franchise QB. It's a pass happy/friendly league now.

Gabbert has shown me (and undoubtedly his coaches) anything that says he's a starter in the NFL in 1.5+ seasons.

These guys aren't NFL starters or franchise QBs and teams tried to force (or hope) them to work. For the past three-five years you've known almost from the first game a rookie QB plays whether or not they've got the stuff to be a franchise QB. It's a pass happy/friendly league now.

Gabbert has shown me (and undoubtedly his coaches) anything that says he's a starter in the NFL in 1.5+ seasons.

The Jags will take a QB next April.

There was no "point" to be missed using Delhomme as an example. Most people didn't think he would ever be a starter when he came into the league. I don't know if he was even drafted. He only got into a handful of games his first five seasons. Vince Young won OROTY and went to the Pro Bowl as a rookie. Don't think anyone was calling him a flop then. Carr started for his first four or five seasons before the wear and tear got to him. Had some decent years on an awful team as well. You can look back now and say he underperformed, but it took a long time and a few serious injuries to sideline him. Also he was the first overall pick, which carries much higher standards of performance. Campbell had a similar start to his career. Looked pretty decent early on. Quinn was Offensive Player The Week this past week. Won the starter job and played a great game under terrible circustances. Cassell was a seventh round pick who didn't start a single game in college. He had some pretty impressive seasons in the league for someone with that background. You can't expect every quarterback drafted in the first round to go to the Hall of Fame. Certainly can't expect late round guys like Delhomme or Cassell to. What they have managed to do is way beyond expectation. Sanchez took the Jets to the playoffs his first two seasons and won several post season games. He is still only 25, so it's way too early to write him off. He looked a lot better than Stafford or Freeman from the same draft, as a rookie.

I really don't see what the "point" of any of your examples is. There are about half a dozen Pro Bowl appearances among the names you've thrown out.

Alpha, I say this as a Jets fan who can empathize, so don't take this personally:

I think your standards of what a "good QB" is has been skewed by years of sub-par QB play. You see other quarterbacks make throws and say that you've seen Gabbert make that throw over and over again, which I'm sure he has. The difference between Gabbert and somebody like Tom Brady isn't very large, simply because of the fact that both are elite professional players (relative to the world as a whole). I'd argue that the difference between an elite QB and an average QB is only 5-7 throws/decisions per game, but it's those handful of throws that make the difference.

However, I will agree that the system a QB is in makes far more of a difference than fans will ever admit for the vast majority of QB's in the game, and the WR's/playmakers make a big difference as well. Who knows what would have happened to Alex Smith if Harbaugh had been there since day one? And I'd be willing to bet boatloads of money that Aaron Rodgers would not be as good as he is now if he had been taken by SF at #1 and Smith had gotten to sit on the bench for 3 seasons in GB.

The guys you mentioned, Brady, Rodgers and Smith are probably better fits as far as comparisons for Gabbert, but Brady was a full year older than Blaine is now before he made his first start. Rodgers was nearly two years older than Gabbert is now. Smith had one less start at Blaine's current age, 17 Tds/27 Int, and a passer rating of 66. Gabbert has 21 Tds 17 Int, 71 passer rating so far in his career.

The guys you mentioned, Brady, Rodgers and Smith are probably better fits as far as comparisons for Gabbert, but Brady was a full year older than Blaine is now before he made his first start. Rodgers was nearly two years older than Gabbert is now. Smith had one less start at Blaine's current age, 17 Tds/27 Int, and a passer rating of 66. Gabbert has 21 Tds 17 Int, 71 passer rating so far in his career.

So maybe Gabbert can aspire to be Smith, a guy who was replaced this year by a second round, second year QB who hadn't made a single start before this season.

The guys you mentioned, Brady, Rodgers and Smith are probably better fits as far as comparisons for Gabbert, but Brady was a full year older than Blaine is now before he made his first start. Rodgers was nearly two years older than Gabbert is now. Smith had one less start at Blaine's current age, 17 Tds/27 Int, and a passer rating of 66. Gabbert has 21 Tds 17 Int, 71 passer rating so far in his career.

Blaine Gabbert got BENCHED FOR CHAD HENNE.

Live with it and stop trying to distort stats and use age as an excuse.

He's hot garbage and everyone but you on this planet has learned to accept that.

There was no "point" to be missed using Delhomme as an example. Most people didn't think he would ever be a starter when he came into the league. I don't know if he was even drafted. He only got into a handful of games his first five seasons. Vince Young won OROTY and went to the Pro Bowl as a rookie. Don't think anyone was calling him a flop then. Carr started for his first four or five seasons before the wear and tear got to him. Had some decent years on an awful team as well. You can look back now and say he underperformed, but it took a long time and a few serious injuries to sideline him. Also he was the first overall pick, which carries much higher standards of performance. Campbell had a similar start to his career. Looked pretty decent early on. Quinn was Offensive Player The Week this past week. Won the starter job and played a great game under terrible circustances. Cassell was a seventh round pick who didn't start a single game in college. He had some pretty impressive seasons in the league for someone with that background. You can't expect every quarterback drafted in the first round to go to the Hall of Fame. Certainly can't expect late round guys like Delhomme or Cassell to. What they have managed to do is way beyond expectation. Sanchez took the Jets to the playoffs his first two seasons and won several post season games. He is still only 25, so it's way too early to write him off. He looked a lot better than Stafford or Freeman from the same draft, as a rookie.

I really don't see what the "point" of any of your examples is. There are about half a dozen Pro Bowl appearances among the names you've thrown out.

It's true. Mularkey said regardless of the injury Blaine was benched for Chad Henne.

Blaine Gabbert has been benched.Gabbert's elbow injury has him questionable for Week 12, but coach Mike Mularkey said at Monday's presser he's been benched regardless. Unless Chad Henne utterly face-plants, it's likely the No. 10 pick of the 2011 draft — a player GM Gene Smith traded up for — has made his final start of 2012, and possibly his career. Gabbert simply hasn't been good enough through 691 career passes, completing just 372 of them (53.8 percent) while posting a 70.2 QB rating, 6.0 YPA and 21:17 TD:INT ratio. The Jaguars offense looked like it was out on bail after Gabbert was benched Sunday. Jimmy Clausen is going to have competition for No. 3 jobs in 2013.

Source: Rotoworld.com

What did I say that was false again?

Gabbert was benched. Stashed on IR so they didn't have to deal with him. They know he isn't the future and the current coaching staff is going to wait for Gene Smith to get fired so the new GM can bring in a real future franchise QB and Mularkey will hitch his wagon to that QB so he doesn't lose his job waiting for Gabbert to (never) come along too.